We have a small but interesting problem with coot startup times.
The first time a user starts coot, it will take around a minute to start up. On subsequent occasions, it will take around 30 seconds. However, if that user runs coot once with "sudo coot" all subsequent invocations will only take around 3 seconds to start up on that machine.
Am I right in assuming that invoking coot with root privileges allows it to write some files somewhere that are used on subsequent runs? Could I change the permissions of the appropriate directory to allow fast startup without giving my users sudo access? Should I just tell the users to be more patient?
Platform information: a variety of macs running OS X 10.6.8. Coot 0.7-pre (also 0.6 in the past) installed using fink. All accounts are network accounts with a network home directory mounted using AFP. We hot desk, so speeding up coot for all users on all machines using sudo would be a horrible task.
Regards,
Chris
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Dr Chris Richardson :: Sysadmin, structural biology, icr.ac.uk
The Institute of Cancer Research: Royal Cancer Hospital, a charitable Company Limited by Guarantee, Registered in England under Company No. 534147 with its Registered Office at 123 Old Brompton Road, London SW7 3RP.
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